A rural Pennsylvania mom took her case all the way to a California federal appeals court after Prince and publisher Universal Music Group tried to make her take down a heartwarming YouTube video of her baby boy bopping to the artist’s “Let’s Go Crazy.”

The precedent-setting copyright and fair-use case still involves some haggling over the broader question of when content providers can send takedown notices. That issue could go all the way to the US Supreme Court, but won’t affect whether or not the baby video can stay up.

The Lenz family had just watched Prince’s performance of the song during the Super Bowl and turned on their CD in the kitchen. While her 13-month-old son Holden bounced around to the beat, Lenz took out her camcorder and then posted the 29-second clip on the Internet so the baby’s grandmother could view it.

“My client, who’s actually a very big Prince fan, was very upset at being accused of copyright infringement,” said Lenz’s attorney, Corynne McSherry — who noted her disappointment that His Royal Badness won’t be around to see the case’s final outcome.

“I’m very sad that this case outlived the musician of the song that started it all,” McSherry said.